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PARLIAMENTARY BOUNDARIES REVIEW COMMITTEE 2 JULY 2003

REVIEW OF PARLIAMENTARY BOUNDARIES (Acting Director of Corporate Services – Legal)

1 INTRODUCTION

1.1 The Boundary Commission for has recently completed and published its review of Parliamentary constituencies for . A one month period of public consultation commenced on 19th June 2003. Accordingly, any objections have to be lodged with the Boundary Commission by 19th July 2003.

1.2 This Committee has been set up to review the Commission’s proposals and to formulate representations (if any) to be made on behalf of the Council to the Boundary Commission by the deadline date.

2 RECOMMENDATION

2.1 The views of the Committee are requested.

3 SUPPORTING INFORMATION

3.1 The News Release, which contains the Commission’s proposals, together with other background information, is attached at Annex A. A more detailed map provided by the Commission will be available at the meeting.

3.2 The Parliamentary Constituencies Act 1986 (“the Act”) requires the Boundary Commission to conduct a general review of all the constituencies in England every eight to twelve years. The current review has to be completed between April 2003 and April 2007.

3.3 The Commission is required to adhere to the Rules for the Redistribution of Seats (Schedule 2 to the Act) which provide for:

· A specified number of constituencies in Great Britain (not substantially more than 613) (Rule 1) · Each constituency to return a single member (Rule 2) · The whole of the City of London to comprise a constituency (Rule 3) · so far as practicable constituencies should not cross County boundaries (N.B. the areas of the individual Berkshire Unitary Authorities are not Counties) (Rule 4) · the electorate of any constituency shall be as near the electoral quota (total electorate divided by number of Parliamentary constituencies) as practical (Rule 5)

1 3.4 The Berkshire Unitary Authorities do not have the legal status of Counties and therefore do not fall within the scope of Rule 4 of the Act. The Commission does not, therefore, have to have regard to the boundaries of those authorities, and has provisionally decided to review the six unitary authorities as one review area.

3.5 Rules 1, 2 and 5 determine that the review area has a theoretical entitlement to 8.31 seats/constituencies.

3.6 The only other changes to local authority boundaries in Berkshire since the last Parliamentary review have been to ward boundaries following the Periodic Electoral Reviews. These reviews have resulted in a number of wards in Berkshire being divided between constituencies. As the Commission does not divide wards between constituencies, this review realigns the constituency boundaries with the new ward boundaries to place wards wholly within seats.

3.7 The electoral quota (Rule 5) provides that the average electorate of each of those constituencies should therefore be 69,934.

4. Commission’s Proposals

4.1 Bracknell Constituency currently includes three wards of Wokingham District Council, namely Finchampstead North and South and Wokingham Without. The whole of the parish of Winkfield is currently included in the Windsor Constituency.

4.2 As the existing Parliamentary boundaries have electorates of significant disparity (Maidenhead being the smallest with 68,536 and Bracknell being the largest with 81,843), the Commission is proposing “minor” changes to existing constituency boundaries across the six unitary authority areas. As far as Bracknell Constituency is concerned, the proposals are:

· To include the divided wards of Crown Wood and Harmans Water wholly within the Bracknell Constituency; and

· In order to reduce the size of the Bracknell constituency, the Boundary Commission proposes that the Wards of Binfield with Warfield, Warfield Harvest Ride, and Winkfield and Cranbourne should fall within the Windsor constituency.

· The three wards of Wokingham District Council currently within the Bracknell County Constituency (CC) to remain.

5. Representations

5.1 Representations may be made within one month of the publication of the provisional recommendations ie by 19 July 2003. Where objections are received from a district/borough or Unitary Council or a body of one hundred or more electors, the Commission cannot proceed with their final recommendations to the Secretary of State until a local Inquiry has been held. If the Commission decides to alter its recommendations as a result, the revised recommendations must also be published and representations invited, although a further local inquiry is not obligatory.

2 5.2 Rules 6 and 7 enable the Commission to depart from the Rules “if special geographical considerations, including in particular the size, shape and accessibility of a constituency, appear [to the Boundary Commission] to render a departure desirable” or to allow account to be taken of “inconveniences and local ties which would be broken by an alteration of Parliamentary boundaries” which would arise from applying the Rules.

5.3 In making their proposals for Bracknell CC, the Commission acknowledges that it is “possible that the wards of Binfield with Warfield and Warfield Harvest Ride have close ties with the town of Bracknell”. The Commission nevertheless concluded that their transfer was necessary “to reduce the very high electorate of Bracknell CC”.

5.4 Anyone making representations is asked to state whether they approve of or object to the proposals and to give reasons. In particular, objectors are advised to say what they propose in place of the Commission’s recommendations. The Commission has indicated that an objection accompanied by a counter proposal is likely to carry more weight that a simple statement of objection. Any solution not found from within Bracknell Borough would obviously have a knock-on effect with the other Berkshire constituencies.

6. ADVICE OF STATUTORY AND OTHER OFFICERS

Borough Solicitor

6.1 The advice of the Borough Solicitor has been incorporated into this report.

Borough Finance Officer

6.2 There are no immediate financial implications.

Access Implications

6.3 None

Background Papers

News Release dated 11th June 2003 issued by the Boundary Commission for England.

Contact for Further Information

Alex Jack (01344 355679) [email protected]

Daphne Gray (01344 352024) [email protected]

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ANNEX A Boundary Commission for England

News Release

Issued by the Telephone 020 7533 5173 Boundary Commission for England or 020 7533 5164 PO Box 31060 Fax 020 7533 5176 London SW1V 2FF Date 11 June 2003

PROPOSALS FOR PARLIAMENTARY CONSTITUENCY BOUNDARIES IN BERKSHIRE

The Commission will publish provisional recommendations on 19 June 2003 for changes to all eight existing constituencies in the area covered by the former County of Berkshire.

Provisional Recommendations

1. Following the Berkshire (Structural Changes) Order 1996, which came into effect on 1 April 1998, the Boroughs of Bracknell Forest, Reading, Slough, Windsor and Maidenhead, and the Districts of and Wokingham acquired unitary authority status and ceased to form part of the county of Berkshire. However, the unitary authorities do not have the legal status of counties and, therefore, do not fall within the scope of Rule 4 of Schedule 2 of the Parliamentary Constituencies Act 1986. The Commission are not, therefore, required to have regard to the boundaries of the unitary authorities in the former county of Berkshire, when considering the distribution of constituencies. They have provisionally decided to review the six unitary authorities as one review area.

2. The boundary of the Borough of Slough was altered on 1 April 1995 to include parts of the counties of Buckinghamshire and Surrey. This led to an alteration of parliamentary constituency boundaries following an interim review in 1998, which took effect at the general election in June 2001. The only other changes to local authority boundaries in Berkshire since the last general review have been to ward boundaries following the Periodical Electoral Reviews by the Boundary Committee for England.

3. The new wards in the unitary authorities came into effect on 1 May 2003 or will come into effect on 6 May 2004. These reviews have resulted in ten of the new wards in Berkshire being divided between constituencies. The Commission do not divide wards between constituencies and their proposals will therefore realign the constituency boundaries with the new ward boundaries to place wards wholly within seats.

4. Berkshire currently has eight constituencies with a 2000 parliamentary electorate of 581,241. This number of electors, when divided by the 2000 electoral quota (69,934), gives a theoretical entitlement to 8.31 seats. The electoral quota is explained in “Rules” below. The existing eight constituencies have electorates ranging from 68,536 in Maidenhead CC to 81,843 in Bracknell CC, a disparity of 13,307.

Boundary Commission for England PO Box 31060 London SW1V 2FF ( 020 7533 5177 Fax 020 7533 5176 GTN 3042 5177 e-mail [email protected] Web Site http://www.statistics.gov.uk/pbc/ 5. The Commission propose to recommend only minor changes to the existing constituency boundaries. They propose to reduce the electorate of Newbury CC by including the West Berkshire District ward of Aldermaston and the whole of the divided ward of Sulhamstead in Wokingham CC. They also propose to increase the electorate of Wokingham CC by transferring the West Berkshire District ward of Theale from Reading West CC, with the M4 motorway forming a clear boundary between the two seats.

6. The Commission propose to include the divided Reading Borough wards of and Whitley wholly in Reading West CC. They propose to include the whole of the divided Wokingham District ward of Loddon in Reading East BC. No further changes are proposed to Reading East BC, Reading West CC or Wokingham CC.

7. The Commission propose to include the divided Bracknell Forest Borough wards of Crown Wood and Harmans Water wholly in Bracknell CC. They also propose to include the Bracknell Forest Borough wards of Binfield and Warfield, and Warfield Harvest Ride and the whole of the divided Winkfield and Cranbourne ward in Windsor CC. The Commission noted that it was possible that the wards of Binfield and Warfield, and Warfield Harvest Ride had close ties with the town of Bracknell, but considered that their transfer was necessary to reduce the very high electorate of Bracknell CC.

8. The Commission propose to increase the electorate of Maidenhead CC by transferring the Windsor and Maidenhead Borough ward of Bray from Windsor CC. They also propose to include the divided Slough Borough wards of Foxborough, Kedermister, and Upton wholly in Slough BC. The overall effect of these changes is to reduce the existing disparity from 13,307 to 4,522.

9. The proposed new constituencies are illustrated in outline on the sketch map which forms part of this document (please note the copyright warning below concerning the map). The letters on the map refer to the districts, and the numbers refer to the district wards. The map is to be used in conjunction with the ward listing at the end of this document which shows the letters and districts, the numbers and wards, and the 2000 ward electorates on which the Commission are required by law to work.

10. The composition of the provisionally recommended eight constituencies would be (the 2000 electorates are shown in brackets):-

BRACKNELL COUNTY CONSTITUENCY (74,307). Fourteen wards of the Borough of Bracknell Forest:- Bullbrook, Central Sandhurst, College Town, Crown Wood, Crowthorne, Great Hollands North, Great Hollands South, Hanworth, Harmans Water, Little Sandhurst and Wellington, Old Bracknell, Owlsmoor, Priestwood and Garth, Wildridings and Central; three wards of the District of Wokingham:- Finchampstead North, Finchampstead South, Wokingham Without.

MAIDENHEAD COUNTY CONSTITUENCY (73,868). Ten wards of the Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead:- Belmont, Bisham and Cookham, Boyn Hill, Bray, Cox Green, Furze Platt, Hurley and Walthams, Maidenhead Riverside, Oldfield, Pinkneys Green; six wards of the District of Wokingham:- Charvil, Coronation, Hurst, Remenham, Wargrave and Ruscombe, Sonning, Twyford.

Boundary Commission for England 6 NEWBURY COUNTY CONSTITUENCY (72,805). Twenty wards of the District of West Berkshire:- Basildon, Bucklebury, Chievely, Clay Hill, Cold Ash, Compton, Downlands, Falkland, Greenham, Hungerford, Kintbury, Lambourn Valley, Northcroft, St Johns, Speen, Thatcham Central, Thatcham North, Thatcham South and Crookham, Thatcham West, Victoria.

READING EAST BOROUGH CONSTITUENCY (72,834). Nine wards of the Borough of Reading:- , , , , Mapledurham, , , , ; three wards of the District of Wokingham:- Bulmershe and Whitegates, Loddon, South Lake.

READING WEST COUNTY CONSTITUENCY (70,078). Seven wards of the Borough of Reading:- Battle, , , , Southcote, , Whitley; five wards of the District of West Berkshire:- Birch Copse, Calcot, Pangbourne, , Westwood.

SLOUGH BOROUGH CONSTITUENCY (73,627). Thirteen wards of the Borough of Slough:- Baylis and Stoke, Britwell, Central, Chalvey, Cippenham Green, Cippenham Meadows, Farnham, Foxborough, Haymill, Kedermister, Langley St.Mary's, Upton, Wexham Lea.

WINDSOR COUNTY CONSTITUENCY (69,785). Four wards of the Borough of Bracknell Forest:- Ascot, Binfield and Warfield, Warfield Harvest Ride, Winkfield and Cranbourne; one ward of the Borough of Slough:- Colnbrook with Poyle; thirteen wards of the Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead:- Ascot and Cheapside, , Clewer East, Clewer North, , , Eton and Castle, Eton Wick, , Old Windsor, Park, Sunningdale, Sunninghill and South Ascot.

WOKINGHAM COUNTY CONSTITUENCY (73,937). Five wards of the District of West Berkshire:- Aldermaston, Burghfield, Mortimer, Sulhamstead, Theale; thirteen wards of the District of Wokingham:- Arborfield, Barkham, Emmbrook, Evendons, Hawkedon, Hillside, Maiden Erlegh, Norreys, Shinfield North, Shinfield South, Swallowfield, Wescott, Winnersh.

11. The wards upon which the Commission based their provisional recommendations were created by the following Orders, which came into effect, or will come into effect, on the date shown in brackets:-

The Borough of Bracknell (Electoral Changes) Order 2002 (1 May 2003). The District of West Berkshire (Electoral Changes) Order 2002 (1 May 2003). The Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead (Electoral Changes) Order (1 May 2003).

The Borough of Reading (Electoral Changes) Order 2002 (6 May 2004). The Borough of Slough (Electoral Changes) Order 2002 (6 May 2004). The District of Wokingham (Electoral Changes) Order 2002 (6 May 2004).

Boundary Commission for England 7 Publication of Provisional Recommendations

12. The provisional recommendations will be published formally in a notice appearing in local newspapers in Berkshire on 19 June 2003. Local Authorities, MPs, the Political Parties Headquarters, and others will be sent a copy of the recommendations. The notice will also be published on the Commission’s web site at:-

http://www.statistics.gov.uk/pbc/

Places of Inspection

13. The notice in local newspapers will also give the addresses where a copy of the recommendations and a more detailed map illustrating them, may be inspected once the notice has been published in the local newspapers on 19 June 2003 (please note the copyright warning below concerning the map). Those addresses are:-

BRACKNELL Council Offices, Easthampstead House, Town Square, Bracknell BURGHFIELD Burghfield Common Library, School Lane, Burghfield HUNGERFORD Hungerford Library, Church Street, Hungerford LAMBOURN Lambourn Library, High Street, Lambourn MAIDENHEAD Town Hall, St Ives Road, Maidenhead NEWBURY Council Offices, Market Street, Newbury PANGBOURNE Pangbourne Library, Reading Road, Pangbourne READING Civic Centre, , Reading Tilehurst Library, School Road, Reading SLOUGH Town Hall, Bath Road, Slough TWYFORD Twyford Library, Polehampton Close, Twyford WINDSOR York House, Sheet Street, Windsor WOKINGHAM Council Offices, Shute End, Wokingham WOODLEY Woodley Library, Headley Road, Woodley

Representation Period: 19 June 2003 to 19 July 2003

14. The Commission are statutorily required to consider representations about their provisional recommendations made within one month of local publication on 19 June 2003.

15. Representations should be addressed to the Boundary Commission for England, PO Box 31060, London, SW1V 2FF, or faxed to 020 7533 5176, or emailed to [email protected]. All representations received by the Commission will be acknowledged.

16. Please note that the Commission are not statutorily required to consider any representations made after 19 July 2003, but will endeavour to take late representations into account. However, the later the representation is made, the more difficult this will be. The Commission therefore ask that all representations be made within the specified month period. In the event that a local inquiry is held into the provisional recommendations, all representations will be made public beforehand so that interested persons may prepare for the local inquiry. Any representation received too late to be issued with the other representations before the local inquiry cannot be given the same weight as the other representations because other interested persons will not have had the same opportunity to consider it.

Boundary Commission for England 8 17. Where representations objecting to the provisional recommendations are made by an interested local authority (a county or district council) or by a body of 100 or more electors, the Commission cannot proceed with their final recommendations to the Secretary of State until a local inquiry has been held. If the Commission decide to alter their recommendations as a result of the inquiry, the revised recommendations must also be published and representations invited, but a further local inquiry is not obligatory.

18. Those who make representations are requested to say whether they approve of, or object to, the Commission’s proposals and to give their reasons for their approval or objection. In particular, objectors are advised to say what they propose in place of the Commission’s recommendations and should note that an objection accompanied by a counter-proposal is likely to carry more weight than a simple statement of objection.

19. The Commission wish to stress that their provisional recommendations relate solely to parliamentary constituencies. They do not affect county, district or parish boundaries, local taxes, the administration of local services, or result in changes to postcodes. Nor is there any evidence that the provisional recommendations have adverse effects on house prices or car and house insurance premiums. The Commission will not, therefore, be able to take account of any representation which is based on these issues.

Background Note

20. The Commission are constituted under Schedule 1 to the Parliamentary Constituencies Act 1986. The ex officio Chairman is the Speaker of the House of Commons. The Deputy Chairman, who presides over Commission meetings, is a High Court Judge appointed by the Lord Chancellor. The other Commissioners are appointed by the Secretary of State. The two Assessors to the Commission are the Registrar General of England and Wales and the Director General of Ordnance Survey. Assistant Commissioners are lawyers appointed by the Secretary of State to conduct local inquiries.

21. The Commission are required by the Parliamentary Constituencies Act 1986 as amended by the Boundary Commissions Act 1992 to conduct a general review of all the constituencies in England every eight to twelve years. The Commission completed their previous general review on 12 April 1995 and must therefore complete the current review after 11 April 2003 and before 12 April 2007.

22. The general review started formally with the publication of a notice in the London Gazette on 17 February 2000. The Commission’s recommendations throughout the review must by law be based on the numbers of electors on the electoral registers on that date.

Rules

23. In recommending new constituencies, the Commission are required to give effect to the Rules for Redistribution of Seats which are contained in Schedule 2 to the 1986 Act.

24. Rule 1 places a limit on the total number of constituencies. Rule 2 requires single member constituencies. Rule 3 relates to the City of London. Rule 4 states that county and London borough boundaries are to be followed so far as is practicable. Rule 5 states that the electorates of constituencies are to be as nearly equal as practicable. Rule 6 allows the Commission to depart from rules 4 and 5 if special geographical considerations make a departure desirable. Rule 7 allows the Commission to depart from other rules; and requires them to take account of inconveniences caused or local ties broken by changes to constituencies. Rule 8 defines the electoral quota as the total number of parliamentary electors in England (i.e. 36,995,157) divided by the existing number of seats (529), and requires the Commission to use the electorates as at the start of a review.

Boundary Commission for England 9 Procedures

25. In conducting a general review of constituencies, the Commission are required by the legislation to follow certain procedures, principally to provide for public consultation.

26. The Secretary of State must be given notice of a review and that notice must be published in the London Gazette. Provisional recommendations must be published in newspapers in the affected constituencies and, unless the proposals are for no changes to be made, they must also be deposited for public inspection in at least one place in each affected constituency.

27. Representations may be made within one month of publication of the provisional recommendations and the Commission must take any representations into consideration. Where objections are received from a county or district council or a body of 100 or more electors, a local inquiry must be held.

28. If the Commission revise their recommendations as a result of an inquiry, the revised recommendations must also be published and further representations invited and considered. A second local inquiry cannot be forced by these further representations, but there is discretionary power to hold a second inquiry. Any further modifications, as a result of further representations or a second inquiry, must also be published and representations invited. When the Commission have decided their final recommendations for the whole country, they must submit a report to the Secretary of State.

Implementation of the recommendations

29. The Secretary of State has a statutory duty to lay the Commission's report before Parliament together with a draft Order in Council giving effect to the Commission’s recommendations with or without modifications. If modifications are proposed, the Secretary of State must also lay a statement of reasons for the modifications.

30. The draft Order in Council is submitted to both Houses of Parliament for approval and, after it is made by Her Majesty in Council, it cannot be called into question in any legal proceedings. The new constituencies take effect at the general election following the making of the Order in Council.

31. The above information is intended to be a general guide only. For a definitive statement of the law, please refer to the Parliamentary Constituencies Act 1986 - as amended by the Boundary Commissions Act 1992, the Local Government (Wales) Act 1994, the Government of Wales Act 1998, and the Scotland Act 1998 - together with the Court of Appeal ruling in R v Boundary Commission for England Ex parte Foot [1983] QB 600.

Boundary Commission for England 10 Crown Copyright

32. The outline map which forms part of this document and the maps deposited at the addresses listed above are based on Ordnance Survey data and are subject to ©crown copyright. Unauthorised reproduction will infringe crown copyright and may lead to prosecution or civil proceedings.

33. Any person wishing to reproduce the outline map or the maps placed on deposit should first contact the Copyright Office at Ordnance Survey, Romsey Road, Southampton SO16 4GU (telephone 023 8079 2929).

Enquiries

34. Should you require further information about these provisional recommendations or about other aspects of the Commission's work please write to the Boundary Commission for England, PO Box 31060, London, SW1V 2FF or telephone:-

Berkshire enquiries 020 7533 5173 or 020 7533 5164 General enquiries 020 7533 5177 Fax 020 7533 5176

Email address for Berkshire enquiries: [email protected] Email address for general enquires: [email protected]

35. The Internet version of this news release is now available on:-

http://www.statistics.gov.uk/pbc/

Boundary Commission for England 11 BERKSHIRE - THE UNITARY AUTHORITIES OF BRACKNELL FOREST, READING, SLOUGH, WEST BERKSHIRE, WINDSOR AND MAIDENHEAD, AND WOKINGHAM 2000 WARD ELECTORATES TO BE USED THROUGHOUT THE REVIEW

A Bracknell Forest Borough 78,238 B West Berkshire District 110,066

1. Ascot 3,913 1. Aldermaston 2,060 2. Binfield and Warfield 5,826 2. Basildon 2,197 3. Bullbrook 3,789 3. Birch Copse 6,399 4. Central Sandhurst 3,932 4. Bucklebury 4,200 5. College Town 3,636 5. Burghfield 4,320 6. Crown Wood 5,822 6. Calcot 6,828 7. Crowthorne 3,726 7. Chievely 1,806 8. Great Hollands North 3,083 8. Clay Hill 4,389 9. Great Hollands South 3,977 9. Cold Ash 2,213 10. Hanworth 6,470 10. Compton 2,252 11. Harmans Water 5,356 11. Downlands 2,246 12. Little Sandhurst and Wellington 3,839 12. Falkland 4,955 13. Old Bracknell 3,341 13. Greenham 3,262 14. Owlsmoor 3,914 14. Hungerford 4,451 15. Priestwood and Garth 5,496 15. Kintbury 3,819 16. Warfield Harvest Ride 5,029 16. Lambourn Valley 4,390 17. Wildridings and Central 3,488 17. Mortimer 3,952 18. Winkfield and Cranbourne 3,601 18. Northcroft 3,946 19. Pangbourne 2,207 20. Purley on Thames 4,916 21. St Johns 4,474 22. Speen 4,169 23. Sulhamstead 2,158 24. Thatcham Central 4,647 25. Thatcham North 3,528 26. Thatcham South and Crookham 3,760 27. Thatcham West 4,789 28. Theale 2,172 29. Victoria 3,312 30. Westwood 2,249

Boundary Commission for England 12 C Reading Borough 103,267 D Slough Borough 77,292

1. Abbey 6,075 1. Baylis and Stoke 6,181 2. Battle 6,191 2. Britwell 6,090 3. Caversham 6,478 3. Central 5,913 4. Church 6,284 4. Chalvey 5,583 5. Katesgrove 5,931 5. Cippenham Green 5,976 6. Kentwood 6,869 6. Cippenham Meadows 5,658 7. Mapledurham 2,439 7. Colnbrook with Poyle 3,665 8. Minster 6,968 8. Farnham 5,987 9. Norcot 7,017 9. Foxborough 3,865 10. Park 6,867 10. Haymill 6,003 11. Peppard 7,158 11. Kedermister 5,673 12. Redlands 7,694 12. Langley St.Mary's 5,167 13. Southcote 6,365 13. Upton 5,302 14. Thames 6,862 14. Wexham Lea 6,229 15. Tilehurst 7,074 16. Whitley 6,995

E Windsor and Maidenhead 102,176 F Wokingham District 110,202 Borough

1. Ascot and Cheapside 3,501 1. Arborfield 1,330 2. Belmont 5,775 2. Barkham 2,045 3. Bisham and Cookham 5,366 3. Bulmershe and Whitegates 6,151 4. Boyn Hill 5,610 4. Charvil 2,115 5. Bray 5,512 5. Coronation 4,511 6. Castle Without 4,640 6. Emmbrook 6,022 7. Clewer East 3,310 7. Evendons 6,744 8. Clewer North 5,654 8. Finchampstead North 4,127 9. Clewer South 3,791 9. Finchampstead South 4,208 10. Cox Green 5,757 10. Hawkedon 6,506 11. Datchet 3,665 11. Hillside 6,652 12. Eton and Castle 1,513 12. Hurst 2,143 13. Eton Wick 1,823 13. Loddon 6,363 14. Furze Platt 5,710 14. Maiden Erlegh 6,769 15. Horton and Wraysbury 3,751 15. Norreys 6,155 16. Hurley and Walthams 4,737 16. Remenham, Wargrave and 4,158 17. Maidenhead Riverside 5,504 Ruscombe 18. Old Windsor 5,172 17. Shinfield North 1,716 19. Oldfield 3,733 18. Shinfield South 3,721 20. Park 3,821 19. Sonning 2,239 21. Pinkneys Green 5,282 20. South Lake 4,532 22. Sunningdale 3,481 21. Swallowfield 1,874 23. Sunninghill and South Ascot 5,068 22. Twyford 4,277 23. Wescott 3,951 24. Winnersh 5,790 25. Wokingham Without 6,103

Boundary Commission for England 13